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RESEARCH PRODUCT
ICR in human cadaveric specimens: An essential parameter to consider in a new lumbar disc prosthesis design.
Leyre VanaclochaJuan Manuel SantabarbaraVicente VanaclochaCarlos AtienzaCarlos AtienzaPablo Jordá-gómezVicente BellochAmparo Vanaclocha-saizsubject
INGENIERIA MECANICAanimal diseasesmedicine.medical_treatmentDisc degenerationProsthesisLumbarmedicineDisplacement (orthopedic surgery)Ossos MalaltiesRC346-429Orthopedic surgeryOrthodonticsmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryLumbar disc prosthesisBiomechanicsvirus diseasesMagnetic resonance imagingICRLow back painChronic low back painNeurology. Diseases of the nervous systemImplantmedicine.symptomLumbàlgiaCadaveric spasmbusinessRD701-811description
[EN] Study design Biomechanical study in cadaveric specimens. Background The commercially available lumbar disc prostheses do not reproduce the intact disc's Instantaneous centre of Rotation (ICR), thus inducing an overload on adjacent anatomical structures, promoting secondary degeneration. Aim To examine biomechanical testing of cadaveric lumbar spine specimens in order to evaluate and define the ICR of intact lumbar discs. Material and Methods Twelve cold preserved fresh human cadaveric lumbosacral spine specimens were subjected to computerized tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and biomechanical testing. Kinematic studies were performed to analyse range of movements in order to determine ICR. Results Flexoextension and lateral bending tests showed a positive linear correlation between the angle rotated and the displacement of the ICR in different axes. Discussion ICR has not been taken into account in any of the available literature regarding lumbar disc prosthesis. Considering our results, neither the actual ball-and-socket nor the withdrawn elastomeric nucleus models fit the biomechanics of the lumbar spine, which could at least in part explain the failure rates of the implants in terms of postoperative failed back syndrome (low back pain). It is reasonable to consider then that an implant should also adapt the equations of the movement of the intact ICR of the joint to the post-surgical ICR. Conclusions This is the first cadaveric study on the ICR of the human lumbar spine. We have shown that it is feasible to calculate and consider this parameter in order to design future prosthesis with improved clinical and biomechanical characteristics.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-08-01 | North American Spine Society journal |